ºì·ãÓ¢ÓïÂÛ̳'s Archiver

ÎÞÉä ·¢±íÓÚ 2008-10-19 01:05

Messages From Heaven: the Most Beautiful Sunrises

Can messages from heaven really be seen up above? Written on the wind and penned in the clouds, messages from heaven cry aloud. In the blink of an eye the moments pass away erasing the messages that had been sent for the day.
Mysteries entertained and hidden in the sky may reveal more than what just meets the eye. When the windows in heaven open up for the day, the angels in heaven come out to play. Painting the sky to reassure the heart that heaven can come in a twinkling of an eye.
What can be said about a sunrise that hasn't been said before? Nothing unless we can learn how a sunrise has inspired some great and noble men before.
Form the beginning of the world, God created the day and the night, so that mankind would not have to live in darkness. Since those sacred words that God spoke to create the light (sun) of the day and the light (moon) of the night, the sun and the moon have continued to return shining as brightly as God had promised it would.
God's Day[img=160,104]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/0_12.jpg[/img]

"The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky proclaims the work of His hands." (Psalm 19:1)
There isn't anything at all, bland with the works of God. His glory can be seen in the heavens each and every day. Science can logically reason out the mechanics of how the sunrise works, but science cannot duplicate the works that God has done.
Rosh Sunrise[img=160,107]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/1_2.jpg[/img]

Mark Twain (1935-1910) was a famous American humorist, writer and lecturer that wrote many unforgettable novels about adventures with his most notable adventure and probably most famous novel being The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” that he wrote in 1884. Mark Twine was born to write and his impressive collection of books, novels, essays, satires, magazine columns, and non-fiction travel pieces that total 44 completed works has immortalized his imaginative story-telling style throughout the generations.
Mark Twine recognized a profound depth of a sunrise in relation to life at large when he inked this famous quote, Rise early. It is the early bird that catches the worm. Don't be fooled by this absurd saw; I once knew a man who tried it. He got up at sunrise and a horse bit him.”
”Sunrise”[img=160,123]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/monet2020impression20sunrise201872_1.jpg[/img]

The famous 17th century French Impressionist painter, Claude Monet obviously was influenced and inspired by the amazing array of colors and beauty of sunrises, because one of his most famous paintings is entitled Impression: soleil levant (Impression Sunrise”). The setting of Monet's Sunrise is looking over the French harbor Le Havre, while looking through his studio window in his hometown of Le Havre in 1874.
Hawaii Sunrise[img=160,110]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/2_2.jpg[/img]

The famous American conservationist, naturalist and writer John Muir (1838-1914), who has been called The Father of the National Parks System” once penned this beautiful quote:
The grand show is eternal. It is always sunrise somewhere; the dew is never dried all at once; a shower is forever falling; vapor is ever rising. Eternal sunrise, eternal dawn and gloaming, on sea and continents and islands, each in its turn, as the round earth rolls.”
Muir, who co-founded the Sierra Club and served as its first president from 1892 until his death in 1914, was also credited with authoring two books The Mountains of California (1894) and Our National Parks (1901).
Mount Raineer at Sunrise[img=160,106]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/raineer20sunrisepreview_1.jpg[/img]

William Blake (1757-1827) was a famous British visionary, mystic, poet, painter and engraver, who was once considered insane and discredited by his peers has risen above his scoffers and is recognized among the greatest contributors to English literature and art.
At some point in William's life, a sunrise inspired this famous quote; He who binds to himself a joy Does the winged life destroy; But he who kisses the joy as it flies Lives in eternity's sunrise”.
Beautiful Sunrise[img=160,237]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/92260276nzagdjjvsunrisesunrays81177_1.jpg[/img]

George Harrison (1943-2001) was a famous musician, producer and composer that also happened to belong to one of the greatest (if not the greatest) British rock bands in history The Beetles.
Sunrises had at least some influenced his life when he quoted Sunrise doesn't last all morning, a cloudburst doesn't last all day, seems my love is up and has left you with no warning. It's not always going to be this gray. All things must pass, all things must pass away.”
Sunrise in Yosemite Valley[img=160,94]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/083kargestrans_1.jpg[/img]

Legendary American photographer Ansel Adams (1902-1984) spent a great portion of his life behind the lens of his camera documenting the immense and unraveled beauty of the Western United States with most notably his contribution conservation efforts to preserve the natural beauty of Yosemite National Park.
Ansel Adams wrote, Yosemite Valley, to me, is always a sunrise, a glitter of green and golden wonder in a vast edifice of stone and space.”
Haleakala Sunrise[img=160,120]http://images.stanzapub.com/readers/2008/09/23/haleakalasunrise_1.jpg[/img]

Joe Adcock (1927-1999) was a first baseman and one the top sluggers in baseball in the 1950s and early 1960s, hammering 336 homers during a long and successful seventeen year career, which he had played primarily for the Milwaukee Braves.
He too was inspired by his witnessing of sunrises and another tremendously talented baseball great Hank Aaron, Trying to sneak a fastball past Hank Aaron is like trying to sneak the sunrise past a rooster.

Ò³: [1]

Powered by Discuz! Archiver 6.1.0  © 2001-2007 Comsenz Inc.